Happiness is to be found when in pursuit of it, in the soothed expectation, on the way, not only upon the arrival. Accepting detours, just going the way, which is anyhow not this obvious to anyone.
Thomas Bettinelli



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"The way the system works now, you see the clothes, within an hour or so they're online, the world sees them. They don't get to a store for six months. The next week, young celebrity girls are wearing them on red carpets. They're in every magazine. The customer is bored with those clothes by the time they get to the store. They're overexposed, you're tired of them, they've lost their freshness".
Tom Ford, September 14, 2010








1.19.2012

Dries van Noten

For this season's collection, Dries van Noten wanted something glamorous without being feminine. He chose as its nexus the most glamorous mid-seventies incarnation of the most glamorous male chameleon of them all : David Bowie as the 'Thin White Duke'. The models sported Ziggy's hairstyle of the time (reddish blond, slicked back). The soundtrack played a radically deconstructed version of "Golden years" (one of his biggest hits in 1975). And Dries van Noten made full use of a silhouette—peak-shouldered, double-breasted jacket over full, pleated pants -that echoed the nouveau-Sinatra outfits worn by David Bowie on his epochal '76 tour in support of "Station to station", the album that launched the TWD on the world. It could have been one more fashion love letter to one of the most influential performers of the past half-century and that would have been the end of it. But obviously DvN had other things on his mind. He said David Bowie got him thinking about surfaces and what happens when you scratch them, and so he put together a collection that was based on oppositions : a formal navy evening jacket over a casual white tee; a sleek chic shawl-collared blazer in traditional camel pinning down the silhouette over huge white cargo pants; a cropped cadet jacket laden with bullion embroidery paired with a chunky hand-knit; dark overcoats in the most traditional English materials layered over their exact twins in bright white technical fabrics. Meneer van Noten's quietly subversive streak was insinuated in the way technical details like snap closings and bonded linings were used on classically tailored camel and navy. An elegant double-breasted camel blazer was paired with his version of motorcycle pants, unzipping from waist to ankle. Unhinged elegance was also the theme of that oversize knitwear and the swaths of fur that defined coat lapels. But these flourishes also helped to emphasize the grandness of the clothes. If Dries van Noten wanted to convey something about heroic masculinity, he chose the right place. The Musée Bourdelle in Paris is filled with the majestic sculptures of Antoine Bourdelle, an alumnus of Rodin's. And, of course, the title of the show's most famous song was "Heroes" (1977).

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